Death & Injury Claims Against Google

Google (Alphabet Inc.) is heavily filtering this blog to protect their business and political interests. They systematically block vital news, health information and travel advice posted here, which could potentially save you and your loved ones from harm. If your family is killed or injured while visiting New Zealand, you can claim damages against the evil corporation because of the censorship.See: Have you lost a loved one in New Zealand?This blog is also regularly hacked by WordPress, and censored by NZ govt.

NZ! Keep Out!

WARNING: DISINFORMATION CAMPAIGN by NZ POLICE
DETAILS OF FATALITIES, INJURIES AND OTHER VIOLENT CRIMES POSTED ON NZ POLICE WEBSITE ARE SUBJECT TO FALSIFICATION.

Import food from New Zealand?

We import food from New Zealand ... even though it makes no sense from a planetary standpoint. —Dr James E. Hansen

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Posts Tagged ‘unlucky’

FOREWORD: In New Zealand we are intimidated from birth to abide by the premise of what [locally] constitutes as being “fair”, “freak”, “unlucky”… This includes having to accept every cock-and-bull story [collectively, disinformation] we hear, so long as it’s being told by the axis of evil: police-government-presstitute. [This way, information, knowledge and expectations are kept at the official “poverty level”, and there’s no compensation, come maim or murder.]

Two young German tourists among at least 6 road fatalities reported Friday/ Saturday

Friday. Only three road fatalities reported:

Two young German tourists were killed in what the police have called “a freak accident” on the Te Anau-Milford Highway in Fiordland on Friday “when a tree fell onto their moving car.” They were Julia Mayer and Kathrin Schmitt, both 19-year-old German nationals.

One person killed in fatal crash near Palmerston North
One person was killed in a two-vehicle fatal crash near Palmerston North. The incident happened at the intersection of Roberts Line and Newbury Line in Palmerston North.

[“Unlucky”] Baby died after infection breakout

One of the “unlucky” 21 babies who caught the [potentially] fatal staphylococcus aureus infection in Auckland Hospital’s Neonatal unit died.

The bacteria is reportedly immune to common antibiotics. In a similar outbreak at Wellington Hospital in 2004 three babies died and at least 30 others infected.

The hospital’s infection control clinical adviser said the infection was relatively common in neonatal intensive care units. [Conclusion: The babies who died must have been “unlucky!”]

Bacterial cells of Staphylococcus aureus, which is one of the causal agents of mastitis in dairy cows. Its large capsule protects the organism from attack by the cow’s immunological defenses. Magnified 50,000X. (Source)